Griffin's 30 pts lead Huskers' win over LSU

LINCOLN, Neb.(AP) -- The secret is out: Nebraska can play with the
best in the country.

The 20th-ranked Cornhuskers established themselves as a
legitimate player on the national scene Sunday, rolling to a
77-63 victory of No. 5 LSU behind Kelsey Griffin's 30 points and
14 rebounds.

"Some people have been questioning our strength of schedule, so
to prove we can play with some of the best teams, it's a great
win," Griffin said. "I'm kind of hoping it put us on the map."

The Huskers finished 15-16 a year ago and were picked sixth in
the Big 12 in the preseason. They quietly rolled off 10 straight
wins before LSU came into the Devaney Sports Center without a
loss on the season.

Nebraska (11-0), out to its best start in school history and on
its longest winning streak ever, dominated the battle of the
unbeatens. The Huskers got out to a 21-4 lead, and after LSU
(9-1) pulled within five points early in the second half, they
went on a 12-2 run and led by double digits the rest of the
game.

LSU is the highest-ranked opponent Nebraska has beaten since a
triple-overtime win over a second-ranked Baylor team in the
2004-05 season.

Cory Montgomery added 16 points and Dominique Kelley 13 for
Nebraska.

"I expected us to come here and be highly competitive," Nebraska
coach Connie Yori said. "One of the things we talked a lot about
is having to expect to win this game. We can't be satisfied with
playing close or playing a good game. We have to expect it. Our
players really took that to heart."

Allison Hightower had 15 points and Katherine Graham 12 for LSU,
which had come into the game with an average winning margin of
32 points.

Griffin led a balanced offense and Nebraska's defense forced LSU
into bad shots throughout the game. Griffin made 12 of 19 shots,
doing most of her damage under the basket in front of 7,717, the
largest crowd in school history for a nonconference game.

"For a lot of people, this is the first time they've seen
Kelsey," Yori said. "I've been watching her for four years. I've
seen this kind of performance in big games time and time again.
For a lot of folks who just walked in for the first time and
watched this, they're like, 'Wow, she's really good.' I've known
it since she walked on campus. She's an All-American type of
player."

LSU, which shot 39.3 percent, had trouble early dealing with
Nebraska's full-court man-to-man defense, missing 12 of its
first 14 shots.

Hightower scored nine points in an 18-6 run that got LSU back in
the game. The Tigers were within five after Latear Eason stole
the ball from Kelley and passed to Hightower, who drove the
length of the court for a layup.

But the Huskers pulled away again, with Kelley putting back a
Griffin miss and Yvonne Turner hitting a jumper to start the
decisive run that put Nebraska ahead 53-38.

"Connie did a heck of a lot better job than I did," Chancellor
said. "She had her team 10,000 times better prepared than I did.
I'm going to tell you now, they're a top 10 or 12 team."

Foul trouble plagued the Tigers. LaSondra Barrett drew her
fourth foul 2:55 into the second half. Eason was called for her
fourth with 14:58 left and Graham her fourth with 11:28 left.

Chancellor's frustration showed early. He drew a technical less
than eight minutes in for walking onto the court while yelling
and pointing a finger at official Melissa Barlow.

Kelley made the free throws and, after Lindsey Moore drew a
charge by Eason, Montgomery hit a 3-pointer to give the Huskers
their 21-4 lead.

"They came ready to play," said Hightower, held to 7-for-21
shooting. "They jumped on us right from the beginning. It was
almost like it was too late. They had the momentum, the energy,
and they were executing well and playing defense well."